5 results on '"Magon, S"'
Search Results
2. Effects of different endurance exercise modalities on migraine days and cerebrovascular health in episodic migraineurs: A randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Hanssen, H., Minghetti, A., Magon, S., Rossmeissl, A., Rasenack, M., Papadopoulou, A., Klenk, C., Faude, O., Zahner, L., Sprenger, T., and Donath, L.
- Subjects
AEROBIC exercises ,CEREBRAL circulation ,EXERCISE ,EXERCISE tests ,MIGRAINE ,PHYSICAL fitness ,RETINA ,BODY mass index ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,EXERCISE intensity - Abstract
Aerobic exercise training is a promising complementary treatment option in migraine and can reduce migraine days and improve retinal microvascular function. Our aim was to elucidate whether different aerobic exercise programs at high vs moderate intensities distinctly affect migraine days as primary outcome and retinal vessel parameters as a secondary. In this randomized controlled trial, migraine days were recorded by a validated migraine diary in 45 migraineurs of which 36 (female: 28; age: 36 (SD:10)/BMI: 23.1 (5.3) completed the training period (dropout: 20%). Participants were assigned (Strata: age, gender, fitness and migraine symptomatology) to either high intensity interval training (HIT), moderate continuous training (MCT), or a control group (CON). Intervention groups trained twice a week over a 12‐week intervention period. Static retinal vessel analysis, central retinal arteriolar (CRAE) and venular (CRVE) diameters, as well as the arteriolar‐to‐venular diameter ratio (AVR) were obtained for cerebrovascular health assessment. Incremental treadmill testing yielded maximal and submaximal fitness parameters. Overall, moderate migraine day reductions were observed ( η P 2 = .12): HIT revealed 89% likely beneficial effects (SMD = 1.05) compared to MCT (SMD = 0.50) and CON (SMD = 0.59). Very large intervention effects on AVR improvement ( η P 2 = 0.27), slightly favoring HIT (SMD=‐0.43) over CON (SMD=0), were observed. HIT seems more effective for migraine day reduction and improvement of cerebrovascular health compared to MCT. Intermittent exercise programs of higher intensities may need to be considered as an additional treatment option in migraine patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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3. No abnormalities of intrinsic brain connectivity in the interictal phase of migraine with aura.
- Author
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Hougaard, A., Amin, F. M., Magon, S., Sprenger, T., Rostrup, E., and Ashina, M.
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PYRAMIDAL neurons ,BRAIN research ,BRAIN tumors ,BRAIN concussion ,CENTRAL nervous system - Abstract
Background and purpose Functional neuroimaging studies have shown hyperresponsiveness of cortical areas to visual stimuli in migraine patients with aura outside of attacks. This may be a key feature in the initiation of aura episodes and possibly also migraine headache attacks. It is unknown if cortical dysfunction is present at rest, i.e. in the absence of any external stimuli. Functional magnetic resonance imaging is a powerful technique for evaluating resting state functional connectivity, i.e. coherence of brain activity across cerebral areas. The objective of this study was to investigate resting-state functional brain connectivity in migraineurs with aura outside of attacks using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Methods Forty patients suffering from migraine with visual aura and 40 individually age and gender matched healthy controls with no history or family history of migraine were investigated. Following advanced denoising, the data were analyzed both in a hypothesis-driven fashion, testing for abnormalities involving 27 different brain areas of potential relevance to migraine with aura including the cortical visual areas, the amygdala and peri-aqueductal grey matter, and in a data-driven exploratory fashion (dual regression) in order to reveal any possible between-group differences of resting state networks. Age, gender, attack frequency and disease duration were included as nuisance variables. Results No differences of functional connectivity were found between patients and controls. Conclusions The previously reported increased cortical hyperresponsivity in the interictal phase of migraine with aura is unlikely to be caused by abnormalities of intrinsic brain connectivity. The interictal migraine aura brain may be abnormally functioning only during exposure to external stimuli. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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4. Genetic associations with brain cortical thickness in multiple sclerosis.
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Matsushita, T., Madireddy, L., Sprenger, T., Khankhanian, P., Magon, S., Naegelin, Y., Caverzasi, E., Lindberg, R. L. P., Kappos, L., Hauser, S. L., Oksenberg, J. R., Henry, R., Pelletier, D., and Baranzini, S. E.
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GENETICS of multiple sclerosis ,CEREBRAL cortex ,DEMYELINATION ,NEURODEGENERATION ,DISEASE progression ,GRAY matter (Nerve tissue) ,GENETICS of disease susceptibility - Abstract
Multiple sclerosis ( MS) is characterized by temporal and spatial dissemination of demyelinating lesions in the central nervous system. Associated neurodegenerative changes contributing to disability have been recognized even at early disease stages. Recent studies show the importance of gray matter damage for the accrual of clinical disability rather than white matter where demyelination is easily visualized by magnetic resonance imaging ( MRI). The susceptibility to MS is influenced by genetic risk, but genetic factors associated with the disability are not known. We used MRI data to determine cortical thickness in 557 MS cases and 75 controls and in another cohort of 219 cases. We identified nine areas showing different thickness between cases and controls (regions of interest, ROI) (eight of them were negatively correlated with Kurtzke's expanded disability status scale, EDSS) and conducted genome-wide association studies ( GWAS) in 464 and 211 cases available from the two data sets. No marker exceeded genome-wide significance in the discovery cohort. We next combined nominal statistical evidence of association with physical evidence of interaction from a curated human protein interaction network, and searched for subnetworks enriched with nominally associated genes and for commonalities between the two data sets. This network-based pathway analysis of GWAS detected gene sets involved in glutamate signaling, neural development and an adjustment of intracellular calcium concentration. We report here for the first time gene sets associated with cortical thinning of MS. These genes are potentially correlated with disability of MS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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5. Six-year follow-up of a case series with non-communicating syringomyelia in multiple sclerosis.
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Weier, K., Naegelin, Y., Amann, M., Magon, S., Mueller‐Lenke, N., Radue, E.‐W., Kappos, L., Stippich, C., Gass, A., and Sprenger, T.
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MULTIPLE sclerosis ,BRAIN imaging ,SYRINGOMYELIA ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,SPINAL cord ,CEREBELLUM ,MEDULLA oblongata ,PATIENTS - Abstract
Background Non-communicating syringomyelia ( NCS) has occasionally been described in case reports and small case series as an incidental finding of spinal cord (SC) pathology in patients with multiple sclerosis ( MS), but only little is known on the clinical course and progression of NCS, and in more general terms on the prognosis of patients with MS and NCS. Methods Nine patients with MS with known NCS at baseline and a control group of 18 age-, sex- and disease course-matched patients with MS without NCS were recruited for a follow-up visit after 6 years. All 27 patients underwent clinical examination and brain magnetic resonance imaging ( MRI), and 8/9 patients with NCS were additionally studied with MRI of the SC. MRI data were analysed for changes in length and maximal cross-sectional area of the NCS, lesion volumes of the brain and cord as well as for volumetric metrics of the whole brain (using SIENAX), the cerebellum and medulla oblongata (using ECCET). Results NCS did not significantly change in size when corrected for multiple comparisons. The clinical data (annual relapse rate, EDSS and disease duration) and MRI metrics (T2 and T1 lesion load; whole brain, cerebellar and medulla oblongata volumes as well as their percentage volume change per year) did not significantly differ between patients with MS with or without NCS. Conclusion The stable findings regarding size and shape of the syrinx and lack of distinguishing MRI and clinical features support the assumption that NCS is not defining a prognostically or pathogenetically distinct subgroup of patients with MS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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